He had, he told us, bought the Francesco
at Sourabaya about three years before, and after making
several trading voyages between Manila and the Ladrone
Islands voyages which did not pay as well
as he had anticipated he fell in with the
master of a Hobart Town whaler, who strongly advised
him to go farther eastwards and southwards, particularly
about the Admiralty Group and their vicinity, where
a few colonial vessels were doing very well, trading
for coconut oil, bêche-de-mer,
sandalwood, tortoise-shell and pearl-shell. Yorke
took his advice and made a very successful voyage
to the Admiralties, taking a cargo of pearl-shell
to Singapore. This he sold very profitably, and
was soon at sea again. On reaching the Admiralty
Group, however, he was prevented from trading by the
hostility of the natives, though on his previous visit
they had been very friendly; and so, fearing that they
might cut off the vessel, he decided to leave.
He had with him a native of Yap, one of the Caroline
Islands a man who had wandered about the
North and South Pacific from his boyhood. His
name was Rul, and he was not only a good seaman and
an expert diver, but spoke fluently nearly a score
of Melanesian and Micronesian dialects.
On the evening of the day that the
cutter left Callie Harbour, on Admiralty Island, Yorke
called his six men together, and told them that he
was very undecided what to do. (I found out afterwards
that he had a way of taking his crew into his confidence “It
pleases them,” he said, “and has proved
very useful on a number of occasions when their goodwill
meant much to me “).
After telling them that he did not
like to risk their lives by trying to return to Callie
Harbour, he asked if they were willing to sail with
him to the southwestern coast of New Guinea, where,
he had heard, there was a great deal of pearl-shell
to be bought from the natives. At the same time
he pointed out to them that it would be a risky undertaking;
he had no chart of that part of the Western Pacific,
and, if they lost the ship, they would stand but little
chance of escaping from the cannibal natives.
“Then,” he went on, “this
fellow Rul said that although he and the other natives
on board were quite willing to go anywhere with me,
he knew of a place only two days’ sail
away to the eastward where there was not only plenty
of black-edge pearl-shell, but hawkbill turtle-shell
as well. He had, he said, been cast away there
in a whaleship, and remained on the island three months,
could speak a little of the language, and gave me
the names of several villages and harbours, but did
not know the name of the island as a whole.
“I brought up my chart, and
in a few seconds I discovered the names he had mentioned.
The island was New Hanover, and, with the northerly
breeze then blowing, I knew we should be there in twenty-four
hours. So I made up my mind to try the place;
for Rul was a thoroughly trustworthy fellow, and I
knew I could depend on him.
“My mate was a young American
named Ted Merriman, a native of New London, Connecticut,
a fine sailorman, and a good navigator. My boatswain,
too, was one of the right sort; and, as for the rest,
although they were all natives, they were good seamen,
and I had never had a sulky look from any one of them
since they first shipped with me.
“We anchored just off a village
which Rul knew, and in a few minutes the people came
off to us in crowds and filled the deck. Many
of them recognised Rul, and they all showed great
friendliness and eagerness to trade; and I, like a
cocksure fool, was thrown off my guard.”
He ceased speaking, sighed, then lit
his pipe and smoked in silence for awhile, and it
was evident to us all that, although he was not an
emotional man, he was strongly affected by the memory
of the tragedy, and reproached himself keenly.
“Everything went well for the
two following days,” he resumed; “the
natives had over ten tons of good black-edge shell,
all of which I bought from them, paying for it principally
in tobacco. It was worth to me in Singapore about
L65 a ton, and only cost me about L3 a ton, so you
may imagine that I felt very well satisfied. Then,
besides the pearl-shell I bought nearly five hundredweight
of splendid hawkbill turtle-shell, giving but two
or three sticks of tobacco for an entire carapace
of thirteen plates weighing between two and three pounds,
and, as you know, hawkbill shell is worth eight dollars
a pound in Hongkong, and much more in London or Hamburg.”
“Captain Yorke,” said
Guest, with a laugh, “you should not have told
us this. Drake here is a very good fellow, but
in business matters as a supercargo he’d
cut the throat of his best friend.”
“Don’t believe that, Captain
Yorke,” I said, “but at the same time I
wish you had not told us of this place. You certainly
have the prior right of discovery, and ought to have
the benefit, so I promise you I will not repeat to
our owners anything you now tell us.”
Yorke’s face changed, and his
bright blue eyes looked into ours with such a kindly
expression that the fascination he already possessed
over me deepened quickly.
“You and Captain Guest are welcome
to my knowledge, but I trust you will use it for your
own benefit, and not consider your owners. Tell
me now, gentlemen, would they consider you?
Would they give you a handsome bonus for putting,
say, five, or six thousand pounds into their pockets?”
“I daresay they would give us
each a cheque for fifty pounds,” said Guest
meditatively.
“Then keep the thing dark,”
said the big man energetically, “keep it dark.
Why should you, Captain Guest, and you, Mr. Drake,
enrich your owners by imparting to them this information?
I tell you, gentlemen, that all shipowners are alike,
at least I never ran across any that showed much consideration
for any one else’s welfare. Nine out of
every ten will work the soul out of their ship-masters
and officers, who, when they grow too old to go to
sea, are chucked out into the gutter to die of poverty,
unless they have laid by a nest-egg for their old age.”
“That is true enough,”
assented Guest, “and our esteemed employers are
no better than the general run. So we will look
on what you have just told us as private; by and by
we will all talk over the matter, and see if we cannot
go into the thing together.”
Yorke nodded. “I’m
with you. I’ve always played a lone hand
hitherto, but I think that I can pull very well with
men like you.”
Then he resumed his story.
“On the morning of the third
day I went ashore with my gun to have a few hours’
shooting on a large swamp, situated about three miles
inland from the village. One of the natives had
told Rul that there were great numbers of wild duck
and plover there, and offered to guide me to the place;
so, telling Merriman that I would be back in time for
dinner, I started with the guide. The gun I had
with me was a double-barrelled pin-fire Lefaucheux
breech-loader, and just before I left the cutter, I
put in a couple of cartridges, intending to have a
shot at some cranes which I saw walking about on the
beach. Most fortunately for me, they flew away
before I could get near enough. Besides the gun,
I brought with me a Sharp’s rifle, as the guide
said that we should most likely see a wild pig or
two about the swamp. The rifle I gave to him to
carry, but the ten cartridges for it I put in my coat
pocket, together with about twenty cartridges for
the gun.
“On landing at the village,
I was met by the head man, who wanted to know if I
would buy a couple of pigs from him. I told him
to take them on board to the mate, who would pay him;
then, the guide leading, we struck out into the forest.
After going about a mile or so, the nigger was joined
by half a dozen young bucks, all armed with spears
and clubs. I asked the guide, who spoke a little
English, what they wanted; he replied that they wished
to see me shoot.
“‘Very well,’ I said, ‘go
ahead then, all of you.’
“The bucks grinned, but instead
of going ahead stepped back to let me pass, and fell
in, in single file at the rear, the guide still leading.
Now, I didn’t like that at all, and I turned
round to tell them to go in front of me; I was just
in time to save myself from getting a spear through
my back as it was, it whizzed through the
side of my coat, and in another second the nigger
who threw it had a charge of shot through his brains.
Then, slewing round, I was just able to drop the guide,
who was running off with the rifle. I hit him
in the back, and saw him fall, then took cover behind
a big tree to load again; but every other nigger had
vanished, and then I heard a sound that filled me with
dread for those on board the cutter the
loud, hoarse bellowing of conch shells.
“I ran over to the guide, who
was lying where he had fallen. I don’t
think he was mortally wounded, for he was quite thirty
yards off when I fired. However, I made certain
of him by cracking his skull with a long-handled club
he carried. Then I loaded the Sharp’s rifle,
slung it over my shoulder by its sling; and started
back for the village at a run, holding my shot gun
ready cocked.
“When I reached the village,
I could not see a soul every house was
deserted, but from the sea front I could hear diabolical
yells and cries. I had to run another hundred
yards or more before I came in sight of the cutter,
and the moment I did so, I saw that it was all over
with poor Merriman and the others the vessel
was simply swarming with niggers, and surrounded by
canoes, into which they were already throwing the
plunder!
“I rested a minute or so to
get my breath and steady my hand, and then opened
fire. The cutter was not two hundred yards away
from where I stood, and the very first shot plumped
right into the black, surging crowd on deck, and one
nigger gave his last jump. I fired three more
shots into them before they had time to get into their
canoes, or spring overboard to swim ashore. Most
of the canoes made off to the south, around a point,
but three or four of them came right in towards me,
heading for the village. I don’t think any
of them saw me, for I was lying down among the roots
and debris of a fallen tree, just above high
water mark. They came in, paddling like mad, but
not uttering a sound. I waited till the first
canoe was within ten yards of me, and then fired both
barrels of my gun in quick succession right into them,
nearly blowing the chest out of the old chief, who
was seated amidships, and wounding all the others.
Then I got to work with my rifle again on the other
canoes; and, although the moment they saw me, the niggers
jumped overboard and dived, I got one for every shot
of the last six cartridges whenever one
got into shallow water and stood up to run, down he
went.
“Then, taking both shot gun
and rifle by the barrels, I smashed them on a rock,
tore off my clothes and boots, and started to swim
off to the vessel, looking behind me every now and
then to see if the niggers were following. But
they had had enough of me, and their empty canoes were
drifting about the bay.
“I got alongside, clambered
up over the waist, and saw a sight I shall never forget every
one of my poor shipmates had been ruthlessly slaughtered,
and their mutilated bodies, stripped of every bit of
clothing, were lying about the deck. A very brief
examination showed me that every one of them was dead in
fact their heads had been beaten to pulp, and each
body was pierced through and through with spear wounds
and hacked and chopped about with tomahawks; while
the deck was just a puddle of blood, mixed with sticks
of tobacco, pieces of print, knives, and all sorts
of trade goods.
“The first thing I did was to
try and hoist the mainsail so as to get under way,
but the black devils had cut away a lot of the running
gear, and the halliards had been severed and lay on
the deck, ready to be taken on shore with the other
loot littered about, though the sail itself had not
been damaged. The jib and staysail, also, I could
not hoist: they were lying in a heap on the windlass
with a dead nigger on top, and, further aft, were
another two of the gentry, one dead and one with a
smashed thigh bone. I slung the wounded man overboard
to the sharks, and then began to consider what was
best to do. The niggers, I felt certain, would
not tackle the cutter again, when they knew I was
safe on board, but I determined to make certain.
“You noticed those two brass
three-pounders I carry? Well, the first thing
I did was to load them with heavy charges of round
bullets, and some nuts and bolts. Then I got
up a dozen or so of rifles, and plenty of ammunition,
and laid them in readiness on the skylight; for, although
the niggers had turned my cabin upside down when looting
the ship, there were any amount of small arms and
various stores in the little hatch under the cabin
table; besides these, I had some more in my own berth
in a locker.
“Just as I was taking a long
drink at the scuttle butt, I saw some of the niggers
creeping back to the village through the trees, and
watching what I was doing. I soon let them know.
“The cutter had swung round,
and was broadside on to the houses, so taking the
gun on the port side over to the starboard, I secured
it well, and then trained it with the other on the
biggest house in the village a sort of
meeting-house or temple, or some such darned thing.
I can tell you, gentlemen, I felt as if I could laugh
when I saw quite a score of the black swine go into
this house, one after another. I had friction
tubes in both guns, and waited for another five minutes;
then I fired them one after another. Whether
many or any niggers were killed, I do not know; but
there was a fearful howling, which did me good to hear,
and the front of the house went into splinters under
the heavy charges of the guns, and in five seconds
the village was deserted again.
“Before I did anything more
for my own safety, I got some sailcloth and rugs,
and covered the bodies of my shipmates the
dreadful appearance they presented just unnerved me,
and I felt like sitting down and crying. But
I had to hustle. I wanted to get under way as
quickly as possible before darkness came on, and it
was now noon.
“First of all I rove the mainsail
halliards, and then bent on the jib, stopping only
now and then to fire a rifle at the village, just to
let the natives know I was keeping my eyes skinned.
Then I hoisted the mainsail and hove up my anchor
without any trouble, for the wind was very light,
and got a good cant off shore as soon as I ran up the
jib.
“As soon as I was well away
from the land, I stood north about so as
so clear Cape Queen Charlotte, the westerly point
of New Hanover, and ran on for three or four hours,
the vessel steering herself while I sewed up poor
Merriman’s and the boatswain’s bodies as
well as I could under the circumstances. I should
have done the same for the natives had I had the time,
especially for Rul, but I had not. About dusk
I brought to, just off the Cape, and dropped them
over the side one after another only just
realising, ten minutes previously, that I was still
stark naked!
“After rounding the north point
of New Hanover, I stood away down the coast of New
Ireland till I made Gerrit Denys Island, where I anchored
for a couple of days, the natives being very friendly,
and giving me all the fresh provisions I wanted for
a little tobacco and some hoop-iron. There was
an old white beachcomber named Billy living with them;
he seemed to do pretty well as he liked, and had a
deal of influence with them, not allowing any one
of them to hang about the vessel after sunset, and
each night he slept on board with me. I gave him
a case of Hollands for lending me a hand to set up
my rigging, which so pleased him that he turned to
and got drunk in ten minutes.
“After leaving Gerrit Denys
I had a hard struggle to make Cape St. George, on
the south end of New Ireland. For eight or ten
days I had rainy weather, with heavy squalls from
the eastward, and did not feel very well into the
bargain, for I had a touch of fever and ague.”
I asked him how he managed at night-time
as regarded sleep.
He laughed quietly, and assured us
that he never lost a night’s rest during the
whole of the time he was at sea. He would simply
“scandalise” his mainsail without reefing
it, haul the staysail sheet to windward, and let the
cutter head reach till daylight. The Francesco
he said and I afterwards found out that
he was not over-rating her qualities was
a marvellous little vessel for taking care of herself.
“Well, I jogged along till one
Sunday morning, when I made the land between Cape
Bougainville and Cape St. George. It had been
raining in torrents for two days, and I was feeling
a bit done up; so, picking out a quiet little bay
with thick forest growing right down to the water’s
edge, and not a sign of a native or native house, I
ran in and let go in fifteen fathoms, but within a
stone throw of the shore. And I’ll be hanged,
gentlemen, if I did not see, ten minutes afterwards,
the smoke of half a dozen signal fires rising over
the trees from as many different places, and all within
three miles of the cutter. However, I was too
weak to heave up again, even had I felt inclined.
I wanted to cosset myself up, and get a good sweating
between thick blankets to drive some of the fever
out of me; and, niggers or no niggers, I meant to
do so that day. Then I thought of a dodge I
mean the broken-glass trick.
“In the hold were half a dozen
barrels of empty gin, beer, and whisky bottles.
We had put them aside to give to the Admiralty Island
people especially the women and children who
attached some value to them as water holders.
I brought up sixty or seventy dozen, and smashed them
up in a clean hogshead. Then I turned the whole
lot out in a heap on the main hatch, got a shovel,
and covered the entire deck fore and aft, first getting
all loose ropes, &c, out of the way, as I did not
want to get any glass in my own hands when I next handled
the running gear. After that I went below, lit
a spirit lamp, and made myself a big bowl of hot soup real
hot soup a small tin of soup and bouilli,
and a half bottle of Worcester sauce with a spoonful
of cayenne pepper and a stiff glass of brandy thrown
in.
“It touched me up, I can tell
you, but I knew it would do me good as I lay down
in my bunk, rolled myself in a heavy blanket, and piled
over me every other rug and blanket I could find.
In half an hour I was sweating profusely, for not
only was the soup remedy working, but the little cabin,
having every opening closed, was stiflingly hot.
However, I stuck it out for a good two hours, till
I felt I could stand it no longer; so I got up, unfastened
my cabin door to get some air, and began rubbing myself
down with a coarse towel. Heavens! it felt delightful;
for although my bones still ached, and I was very
shaky on my legs, my head was better, and my spirits
began to rise. I put on my pyjamas, went on deck,
and had a look round. It was nearly dark, the
rain had cleared off, a young moon was just lifting
over the trees, and the little bay was as quiet as
the grave except for the cries of a colony
of flying foxes which lived in a big vi tree
just a cable’s length away from the cutter.
“I knew that the New Britain
and New Ireland natives don’t like going out
after dark, and that if these people meant mischief
to me, they would wait till just before daylight,
when they would expect to find everyone on board asleep;
so, feeling much better and stronger, I turned in
at eight o’clock, and slept till past midnight.
I made some coffee, drank it, and laid down again,
dozing off every now and then till just before dawn.
Then I heard a sudden rush on deck, followed by the
most diabolical howls and yells as twenty or thirty
niggers jumped overboard with bleeding feet, many
of them leaving their clubs lying on the deck.
I put my head out of the cabin, and gave them half
a dozen revolver shots, but I’m afraid I didn’t
hit any of the beggars.
“I got away on the same morning,
and made a fine run right across St. George’s
Channel, and along the New Britain coast till I made
Cape Roebuck. Once the cutter did a steady nine
knots for thirty hours. After running on that
reef, I did not drop anchor again till I brought up
off a rocky beach a few miles from here; and there
the niggers made another try to get me, but the broken
glass again proved effectual.”
“It’s a mighty smart dodge,
Captain Yorke,” said Guest, as we rose and shook
hands with him, for he was going to sleep on board
his own vessel.